The New Student-Teacher Channel
        
        
        
          If self-disclosure between teacher and student can  boost learning outcomes, blogging may be itsmost effective mode.

BY VERNON B. HARPER JR.
The Web is no longer a novel ingredient  in the learning experience; it  is intrinsic and constant. In fact, a  host of new technologies has sparked an  age of inexpensive, effortless, and  universal Web access in the classroom,  while wireless devices and protocols have  steadily moved downstream and down the  soci'economic ladder.With this incredible  availability, educators and learners  are brought together in common effective,  intellectual, and pedagogical planes  that have never existed before.
Blogging, of course, is one of the Web’s  more recent developments. In The State of  Blogging (Pew Internet and American Life  Project, 2005, www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_blogging_data.pdf), Lee Rainie  explains that over 32 million Web users  now read blogs regularly, a 58 percent  jump from early 2004. Extremely popular  with journalists and media watchers,  blogging can be thought of as an unfiltered  perspective on countless topics.  Consisting largely of personal commentary,  blogs are available to anyone with  Internet access.Once posted online, practically  anyone is free to “post” a response  to the “blogger.” And although blogs are  often confused with listservs, threads, and  bulletin boards, blogging software offers  more control over the path of the Internet  dialog, and it is this distinction that has  exponentially driven blog popularity.
So, it should come as no surprise that    educators have begun to consider blogging    for classroom purposes.Some believe    that the blogs open an avenue of student    self-disclosure that was previously inaccessible,    and many argue that self-disclosure    is an underutilized tool in the repertoire  of most modern educators.
Self-Disclosure  in the Classroom
  Self-disclosure can be viewed from a  variety of perspectives, but one of the  most comprehensive is offered by Irwin  Altman and Dalmas Taylor in their work  Social Penetration: The Development of  Interpersonal Relationships (Holt,  Rinehart, and Winston, 1973). The  authors paint a clear picture of interpersonal  interaction, and they consider selfdisclosure  to be the exchange of information  pertaining to oneself that serves to  enhance intimacy. One outcome of selfdisclosure  is the norm reciprocity,which is  a feeling of obligation “to reciprocate with  our own disclosure when another person  reveals himself.…”
Yet, although using disclosure to forge a bond with students ech'es common sense, educators often avoid personal revelations in the classroom because they can be quite unpredictable. For example, Valerie Downs,Mitch Javidi, and Jon Nussbaum, in “An Analysis of Teachers’ Verbal Communication Within the College Classroom:Use of Humor,Self-Disclosure, and Narratives,” (Communication Education, 1988),explain that instructors often use humorous disclosures to gain favor with a class; however, such disclosures often sacrifice classroom productivity.   What’s more, it would be untrue to say that  every learning experience requires extensive  instructor self-disclosure.For instance,  it is doubtful that young children need  to learn of a teacher’s marital conflict or  battle with depression, but with older  learners, some educators have found that  personal revelations can be quite effective  tools to generate a positive learning environment.  Gary Goldstein and Victor  Benassi, writing in “The Relation Between  Teacher Self-Disclosure and Student  Classroom Participation,” (Teaching of  Psychology, 1994), also found that classroom  participation improves with  instructor self-disclosure.
 Additionally, in “Using Teacher  Self-Disclosure as an Instructional Tool”  (Communication Teacher, 2004), Jacob  Cayanus describes how “positive teacher  self-disclosure can result in students  viewing the teacher as friendly and warm,  which in turn helps create a positive  learning environment.” Nevertheless,  achieving reciprocity and the positive  learning outcomes associated with selfdisclosure  is no easy feat; students possess a  variety of introverted and cautious personalities  that can be extremely difficult to  overcome, and an instructor’s attempt to  bring students’ views out into the open is  often met with resentment. But blogging  can potentially aid instructors by creating a  unique avenue for open disclosure without  the instructor’s direct presence.
Blogging and Learning  Outcomes: The Focus Groups  
  Yet, does blogging actually influence  self-disclosure or learning? To find out,  a series of focus groups were conducted  with collegiate upperclassmen from  Christopher Newport University (VA)  following eight weeks of blogging by  the instructor. The blogging experience  and subsequent focus group responses  reveal a variety of insightful clues and  caveats for successfully employing  blogs in your own institution’s or  district’s classrooms.
After receiving institutional approval  to conduct the focus groups, an appropriate  collegiate course of upperclassmen  was selected. The students were given the  option to participate in the blog or  complete another course assignment. The  instructor’s weekly reflections of course  content and current events were uploaded  through readily available blog freeware  from Google’s blogspot.com (now  www.blogger.com). Fifteen of the 30  students elected to post responses to the  instructor’s blog.Over the course of eight  weeks, seven blogs were written by the  instructor, which generated 73 response  posts by the students. Each of the focus  groups was conducted by the instructor  and composed of approximately three  students.
Self-disclosure was the first issue  explored in the focus groups, and the  students indicated that the blog did  provide a distinctive avenue for the type  of reciprocal disclosure mentioned above.  One student remarked:“I expressed more.  …You can even take the comments that  people said in class and think about  [them] in relation to your own life and  then come out with something in the blog.  Then, you are kinda [sic] revealing a little  bit more yourself.”
One of the most powerful observations  was that students who were typically nonparticipatory  revealed extensively in their  response posts. The following student  commentary gives a clue to the behavior: “I find it a lot easier to express myself  through writing then [sic] verbally,and a lotof times in class it takes me along [sic] time to think of something sensible  that I want to say and by that  time the conversation has  moved on. So, I have more  time to sit and think when I  am writing.”
In Online Counseling: A Handbook for  Mental Health Professionals (Elsevier, 2004),  Internet theorists Ron Kraus, Jason Zack,  and George Stricker point to a “zone of  reflection” as a significant difference  between face-to-face and online interaction.  With a zone of reflection,students appear to  process information at a much deeper  cognitive level. Said one focus group participant:  “I started to see [theories] more than  just in the classroom. I would be watching a  movie and I could analyze it.…Anywhere, I  would just be like that is so and so theory.…I think it made us a little bit more criticalabout everything we learned in the class.”
Enhanced critical thinking has always  been the hallmark of great learning experiences,  and it appears that blogging can  play a significant role in developing this  skill.Even with these significant strengths,  the blogging experience also revealed  some important cautions for educators. 
 
 
Caveats and Considerations  for Implementing Blogs
  As mentioned previously, blogging generates  reciprocal self-disclosure between the  instructor and student, and more introverted  students who typically do not  reveal in the classroom may expose a great  deal online. Interestingly, these shy  students do not believe that online selfdisclosure  should be brought back into the  face-to-face classroom. One of the focus  group questions dealt specifically with the  issue of an instructor referring to a  student’s post in class. The students generally  indicated that once a disclosure is  made in the blog, it should stay in the blog:  “Some people are a little bit more private  about the things they write [online] and  there might be…an embarrassment  factor…so [it was all right] as long they  knew you were going to share it [in class]  and as long as it wasn’t…an attack environment.”
This is an important caution for educators  using a blog,and there is some evidence  in the literature to support the idea that  people view online interactions  very differently  from face-to-face interactions  (Robert Cathcart  and Gary Gumpert, “Mediated Interpersonal  Communication: Toward  A New Typology,”  Quarterly Journal of  Speech,1983).
Another important  blogging concern is the  explicit control that must  be exercised by the  educator. Just as in  a face-to-face classroom,  students will reveal  inappropriate content or  comment in an inefficacious  manner. Instructors must be quick  and diligent in their management of  messages posted to a blog. As Susan  Hendrick writes in “Counseling and Self  Disclosure” ( Self- Disclosure: Theory,  Research, and Therapy, Valerian Derlega  and John Berg, eds., Plenum Press, 1987),  “It seems essential that we not take the  word reciprocity too literally. Reciprocity  refers to a mutual giving and taking …  however, it d'es not mean equality.” In  other words, an educator’s blog establishes  the flow of subsequent response  posts by the students, and the proper  utilization of that authority influences the  ultimate learning outcomes of critical  thinking and disclosure.
A variety of tools are available through  the blog software to aid in this new type of  classroom management.First, the educator  should always select the “e-mail posts”  option. In doing so, each new response post  will be sent electronically to the instructor  so that improper posts can be quickly  removed. Another important control  pertains to whether students can respond to  the posts made by their peers. By allowing  this option, the blog migrates into a typical  discussion thread, and the instructor no  longer guides the blog.Although this democratic  approach to the blog can be quite  helpful in some situations,most instructors  will want to focus their students’ attention  upon a specific topic.
Blogging:    The Ability to Extend Learning  
  When all of the issues are taken into consideration,  a blog can be an incredible tool to  generate self-disclosure between educator  and student. And although a blog may be  more advisable with mature learners, with  the content controls afforded by the blog  software, it is also an appropriate technique  to introduce younger learners to online  interaction. In the end, a blog extends the  learning experience well beyond the face-to-face classroom, creating a more  complete learning experience.  
For more information on blogging in the    classroom, visit educational.blogs.com.
Vernon B. Harper Jr. is an assistant    professor of communication technology at    Christopher Newport University in  Newport News,VA.